China and Indonesia have started talks on the ambitious local production of C-705 anti-ship missiles
as part of Indonesia’s efforts to achieve independence in weapons production.
The
defense cooperation reflects strengthening ties between both countries
amid heightening tension in the South China Sea involving China and a
number of Indonesia’s ASEAN neighbors.
Defense Ministry chief
spokesman Brig. Gen. Hartind Asrin said that the initial talks were
conducted during the first China-Indonesia defense industry cooperation
meeting held in Jakarta on Wednesday.
The ministry’s defense
potential director general Pos M. Hutabarat hosted the Chinese
delegation which was led by Liu Yunfeng, a deputy director general at
the Chinese State Administration for Science, Technology and Industry
for National Defense (SASTIND).
“The meeting discussed various
efforts to improve cooperation between the defense industries of both
countries,” Hartind said on Thursday. “We’ve already prepared an area
for the [missile] production site that faces the open sea for trials.”
Hartind said the C-705 had a range of 120 kilometers.
He said that the Indonesian Navy had successfully test-fired the C-705 missiles in the Sunda Strait.
“China has also offered to donate weapons systems that Indonesia might need,” he added.
A
source said that Indonesia was expected to reply to Phase 1 of the
missile proposal at the end of August and Phase 2 one month later. A
contract is expected to be signed in 2013.
Phase 1 is on semi-knocked down production while Phase 2 is on completely-knocked down production.
A
proposal for a Phase 3 on research and development is already on the
table although the focus is currently on the first two phases.
Aside
from the missile production, a number of Indonesian Army Special Force
Command (Kopassus) members recently conducted the second “Sharp Knife”
joint exercise with Chinese Special Forces operatives earlier this month
in Jinan, Shandong, China.
China has also offered to train 10 pilots from the Indonesian Air Force to train using a Sukhoi simulator in China.
Commenting on the defense cooperation, defense expert Andi
Widjajanto said the industrial cooperation was solely to gain access to more advanced technology.
“However,
it will take a long time for us to be independent in the defense
industry, perhaps after 2024. This is the reason Indonesia builds
partnerships with many countries that possess modern military
technologies,” he said. “This is also why we require partner countries
to transfer their technologies to us in any agreement we sign with
them.”
Andi added that there were two goals in terms of the
partnership: to access advanced rocket technology, and to collaborate in
upholding maritime security, which began when President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono signed an agreement in March during a state visit to Beijing.
“I don’t believe it has anything to do with conflicts in the South China Sea,” he stressed.
Meanwhile,
chairman of the House of Representatives’ Commission I on defense
issues, Mahfudz Shiddiq, said such global partnerships in the defense
industry were designed to develop Indonesia’s own industry.
“We
have allocated Rp 150 trillion [US$15.8 billion] to modernize our
weapons-defense system from 2010 to 2014. It would be wasteful paying
such a huge amount to foreign defense industries without any attempt to
improve our own,” he said.
“Therefore, we require partner
countries to transfer their military technologies in the hope that they
will gradually improve our own technologies.”
He added that the
partnership with China was due to its advanced military technologies in
fields such as rocketry. “This is not political, even though others
might link the partnership to political issues, for example the South
China Sea disputes,” Machfudz said.
Indonesia already cooperates
on weapons production with several other countries including South Korea
to build jet fighters and submarines, the Netherlands to build frigates
and Spain to build medium transport aircraft.
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